The new mini programs work within the messaging app, and the early crop at launch include a Prisma-like photo editing app, a Pomodoro Timer productivity app, a flight search engine, and one for recipe searches.

The Prisma-lookalike mini program.

Image: Ng Yi Shu Mashable

A Pomodoro productivity timer mini program.

Image: Ng Yi Shu/Mashable

The WeChat flight tracker mini program.

Image: Ng Yi SHU/Mashable

The WeChat recipe/cookbook mini program.

Image: Ng Yi SHU/Mashable

WeChat could become the biggest app distributor in China

With the mini programs, the already-dominant WeChat continues its march to become practically ubiquitous on Chinese handsets, where people already use the messenger for real-life tasks like paying at restaurants, to hailing a Didi Chuxing ride.

While WeChat won't have an app store per se, being able to distribute apps this way will be especially effective in China, where the international version of the Google Play Store on Android devices is blocked. With most people hopping across various third party Android stores, WeChat has the opportunity to pull a broad swathe of users to its one store.

In effect, WeChat could possibly become the largest distributor of apps in China.

Android is going instant too

It's somewhat similar to Google's Instant Apps that was unveiled at the I/O conference in May last year.

Google hasn't launched the feature yet.

In Tencent's annual data report published last year, the company found that nearly half of WeChat's users use the app for more than 90 minutes each day.

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